Style: Black line with colors. Genre: Super Hero/Crime. Time
Span: Present Day. Nudity: Full
frontal.Original Art Plate: Drawn in Sharpie pens and Pigma pens on 11" x 17" Strathmore paper. Background for the Marvel character:
Cage is a Marvel hero who debuted
some 30 years ago as "Luke Cage, Hero for Hire" Marvel's first
African-American hero to star in his own comic. He later became Power
Man, a more traditional super-hero, but the original concept was an urban
variation on hard-boiled detective noir: an ex-con mercenary who sells
his services to the highest bidder, but has a conscience under his steel-hard
exterior. Literally steel-hard, in Cage's case, because a botched prison
experiment has left him with bulletproof skin. Azzarello and Corben's
redition of a character is back to his roots. Keywords: Contract killer. Neighbourhood. Gangs. Girls. Bars.
Guns. War. Money. Cops. Mayor. Fist fighting. Coolness. Bulletproof.Synopsis: Ex-con and contract killer Cage will be hired by a sorrowing
mother of accidentally killed young girl. Research leads Cage into more
paying waters: a killer neighbourhood is run by Clifto, a leader of youngster
ballers, Tombstone Lincoln, a Harlem businessman, and Hammer, an Italian money
washer. Cage will be involved with all of them, and his appearing will
also mix the harmony of three. And when the Mayor puts his nose down to
hood,
the war is loose.Comment: Cage is an old Marvel character from who Nicholas "Con-Air" Cage
stole his athletic pseudonym. Disparate from Brian Azzarello's two other
stories, "Banner" and "Hard
Time",
this one has a lot of leg work. Cage is walking around and making a lot
of talk, but actually not much happenes during story. In the beginning
he is an observer, and as
soon as he has got relationship with all tree, the action starts. During
the story he has got flashbacks from his past, which ultimate truth
is revieled not until in the end. Pay atenttion, that in the front cover
of Part
#1, "Cage
Knuckle-Duster",
the two sparkles form a fench in front of Cage. That means he is both a con vict
and a guy from the street.
Artwork
is
creative
from
the start to the end. Cage is muscular and attracts women, this time a Korean
bartender Dixie. Story has got an exceptionally beautiful color work by
José Villarrubia (dirty/sandy
backgrounds and beautiful mirror reflections).
But like all Azzarello's stories the end sucks! - Well, after reading more about
the backgrounds of the character (Luke) Cage, it makes the ending a bit better,
but still not excellent. Connections: In an interview Rapid Fire with Brian Azarello by Tom Waters (Dec. 1, 2006) Brian said, "I just basically did Red Harvest [by Dashiel Hammett]". Akira Kurosawa's Yojimbo (1961) was said to be inspired by the book, Sergio Leone's Per un pugno di dollari aka A Fistfull of Dollars (1964), and Walter Hill's Last Man Standing (1996) have been based on Yojimbo. All the above connects to "Cage" by Brian Azarello. Extra: Because of the Marvel policy, José Villarrubia was foreced to remove the manhood of Cage on page 8 of part 3 in the final comic story. José said, it was a common prosedure in Marvel; they would not print it otherwise. The deed was accepted by Mr. Corben. Special: All cover arts describe Cage character brilliantly: violence,
bulletproof, broad, con vict, and coolness. Cage's smile with a reveal of golden
teeth in last issue resambles his occupation of big, big money. Though in reality
he's got only one golden tooth. Pict is "taken" from the same Part
(pg 3),
where
Dixie asks from beaten Cage, "How you feelin'?". Cage replies, "Like
I look." "That
bad?", Dixie
asks, and Cage smiles to mirror, "Baby... I always look bad."